Re: Regional geopolitics
There is a partial truth in that (rhetorical) question, but only partial. Let's start with the Italians and their long drawn history of disunity despite having inherited the focal point of the Roman empire, which is an extreme irony. The Italians were disunited politically and were a territory of city states controlled by mainly "dynasties" of purely commercial interests, with the Papacy and its Papal States as the notable exception (although the Borgias were definitely a commercial clan) and only true catalyst for eventual unification, with some credit to the Fascists at the latest stage of unification in Italy's history, something the knowledgeable Italian will say without hesitation despite all the stigma attached with that movement. For example, we have the Lombards who ended up ironically uniting the country for quite a long time, and this length of time, again, was entirely due to the reluctance of the various Italian commercial dynasties to make that big decision: to beg the Pope to indulge the Franks into ousting the Lombards, which is something that did eventually happen. The Lombards were defeated, and the disunited Italy resumed its business. Italy is actually the worst example, even post-Garibaldi Italy, where Garibaldi (merely a Mussolini prototype, less honest) was actually yet another henchman, no more no less, for hire by the ambitious Savoy clan who had based themselves in Sardinia, and from there had launched their operations of toppling the individual city states and creating a united Italy. Historians of various political leanings treat this episode vastly differently, but my take is that the Savoy were savvy businessmen that simply outmaneuvered their rival city state dynasties. They used the element of "emerging nationalisms" as the inspiration for their moves, but the point is that they needed and used foreign inspiration (and a foreign dynasty taking the initiative), the principal incentive being an avoidance of another Napoleonic era.
In the case of Persia, you simply cannot compare imperialism with nationalism. THey are certainly two distinct and vastly different models with equally great differences in results for their populations with an equally greater difference in the set of ambitions on behalf of their leadership cadre. Persia, Iran if you wish (as I am still wary of that name), was merely a weakened empire, still in tact with its state and military apparatus, and did not need any inspiration. Parasitic empires, (redundant term, since empire means parasite, essentially), tend to maintain their composure due to the very nature of their state model, which is that of conquest and oppression exclusively. That is true, but why is that such a comparable case to Armenians, who are a nation who had non-imperial kingdoms that collapsed under the pressure of imperial ambitions of their neighbors, one of which was definitely the Persian? THe various Armenian kindgoms, including the central one at Ani and its predecessors, were confederate and truly national entities that were not based on this "conquest and oppression, totalitarian" model despite all false misconceptions. Perhaps they should have adopted such a model, but would Armenians be Armenians anymore in such a climate (as author Derenik Demirjian noticed and so well described our character)?
Such broad statements are simply inaccurate and unfair. Armenians were always inspired for freedom in some form, and the only thing I will grant you is that they, in their weakened state, sought opportunities that were less risky, ironically due to the sort of unnatural leadership that had resulted due to the loss of statehood. Really, even from Madras and the resulting Emin expedition and then the campaigns by David Beg were driven by the merchant classes, who were prudent people who tended to take less risks. But you also say that such prudence would have been better in the 19th century especially.
But, the populations in Armenia, as Emin's journals truly show, were always ready for independence from the Ottomans and the Persians. There's no doubt. The irony is that you blame Armenians for revolutionary acts, but those acts were easily catalyzed precisely because the desire for freedom always existed.
I will have to agree with you on the "revolutionary" bungling, such as the Ottoman bank incident, which is something that was warned against by Grigor Artsruni. There were better opportunities and methods, and Artsruni was working on it, financing it, cooperating with others on it. If they had been given the chance, things would have bee much different for us. The ARtrsuni clan, by the way, is one example of why your rule of "lack of action without external inspiration" is invalid. These folks, inheritors of a leading dynasty, always had in their future an Armenian state of some sort. This was evident in his writings and in the actions of his father and grandfather, the details of which are covered in Leo's biography in his History volume 6.***
***I wish that would be digitized somewhere. If it is, I hope someone lets me know.
Originally posted by lampron
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Originally posted by lampron
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In the case of Persia, you simply cannot compare imperialism with nationalism. THey are certainly two distinct and vastly different models with equally great differences in results for their populations with an equally greater difference in the set of ambitions on behalf of their leadership cadre. Persia, Iran if you wish (as I am still wary of that name), was merely a weakened empire, still in tact with its state and military apparatus, and did not need any inspiration. Parasitic empires, (redundant term, since empire means parasite, essentially), tend to maintain their composure due to the very nature of their state model, which is that of conquest and oppression exclusively. That is true, but why is that such a comparable case to Armenians, who are a nation who had non-imperial kingdoms that collapsed under the pressure of imperial ambitions of their neighbors, one of which was definitely the Persian? THe various Armenian kindgoms, including the central one at Ani and its predecessors, were confederate and truly national entities that were not based on this "conquest and oppression, totalitarian" model despite all false misconceptions. Perhaps they should have adopted such a model, but would Armenians be Armenians anymore in such a climate (as author Derenik Demirjian noticed and so well described our character)?
Such broad statements are simply inaccurate and unfair. Armenians were always inspired for freedom in some form, and the only thing I will grant you is that they, in their weakened state, sought opportunities that were less risky, ironically due to the sort of unnatural leadership that had resulted due to the loss of statehood. Really, even from Madras and the resulting Emin expedition and then the campaigns by David Beg were driven by the merchant classes, who were prudent people who tended to take less risks. But you also say that such prudence would have been better in the 19th century especially.
But, the populations in Armenia, as Emin's journals truly show, were always ready for independence from the Ottomans and the Persians. There's no doubt. The irony is that you blame Armenians for revolutionary acts, but those acts were easily catalyzed precisely because the desire for freedom always existed.
I will have to agree with you on the "revolutionary" bungling, such as the Ottoman bank incident, which is something that was warned against by Grigor Artsruni. There were better opportunities and methods, and Artsruni was working on it, financing it, cooperating with others on it. If they had been given the chance, things would have bee much different for us. The ARtrsuni clan, by the way, is one example of why your rule of "lack of action without external inspiration" is invalid. These folks, inheritors of a leading dynasty, always had in their future an Armenian state of some sort. This was evident in his writings and in the actions of his father and grandfather, the details of which are covered in Leo's biography in his History volume 6.***
***I wish that would be digitized somewhere. If it is, I hope someone lets me know.
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